Nobody seems to be talking much about favipiravir, which seems a bit like not-invented-here syndrome. If it stood to make a lot of money for some US big pharma company I suspect we'd be hearing more about it.
It seems to me like people "talking much about" unproven drugs is the problem, and that favipiravir (and its patients) is lucky to have been spared much of that nonsense.
People want to talk about this stuff because it feels like a magic bullet. Viral infections don't have magic bullets[1], they just don't. We have to beat this with elbow great: huge amounts of testing and tracing once the outbreak is at a manageable baseline, and high uptake of mitigation strategies like social distancing until it gets there. And yes, that costs a lot of money.
[1] Rather: they do, but they're called vaccines and take time.
They do. Consider HIV/AIDS. Nowadays, someone who gets HIV-positive at the age of 20 can expect to live to 70. It's quite astounding what modern combination therapy can do.
pbarnes_1|5 years ago
That's something.
lbeltrame|5 years ago
BurningFrog|5 years ago
newacct583|5 years ago
People want to talk about this stuff because it feels like a magic bullet. Viral infections don't have magic bullets[1], they just don't. We have to beat this with elbow great: huge amounts of testing and tracing once the outbreak is at a manageable baseline, and high uptake of mitigation strategies like social distancing until it gets there. And yes, that costs a lot of money.
[1] Rather: they do, but they're called vaccines and take time.
HarryHirsch|5 years ago
They do. Consider HIV/AIDS. Nowadays, someone who gets HIV-positive at the age of 20 can expect to live to 70. It's quite astounding what modern combination therapy can do.
BurningFrog|5 years ago
So, by definition, we will only have unproven drugs to use for the foreseeable future.